The Power Politics of International Tax Cooperation: Why Luxembourg and Austria accepted automatic exchange of information on foreign account holders' interest income

Research output: Working paperWorking papers

Authors

Theories of tax competition predict that small countries competing with large countries benefit, as they find it relatively easy to substitute revenue lost in a tax cut with revenue gained from incoming foreign tax base. If small countries can only lose from tax co-operation, why are Luxembourg and Austria bound to agree to a revised EU Savings Tax Directive that will oblige them to automatically provide information on foreign account holders’ interest income to residence countries? Putting emphasis on the neglected issue of power, I show that Luxembourg and Austria were first coerced into bilateral agreements on automatic exchange of information by the United States, which then activated a most-favored nation clause contained in the EU Directive on Administrative Co-operation in Tax Matters.
As a result, the two countries were under a legal obligation to also extend greater co-operation to EU partners.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationSan Domenico di Fiesole
PublisherEuropean University Institute
Number of pages16
Publication statusPublished - 2014

Bibliographical note

© Lukas Hakelberg, 2014

    Research areas

  • Politics - international political economy, tax competition, EU politics, power politics, tax policy, Two-Step Approach